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So Nina's dancing gets better as she becomes crazier, growing more and more estranged from herself.
In analyzing these polls in the United States, I see clearly that voters feel ever more estranged from government — and that they associate Democrats with government.
What I'm acutely aware of now is how, as time passes, I'm more and more estranged from my children's other life.
I disagree with Lynn Hirschberg's view (Nov. 14) that our movies are becoming more and more estranged from the American reality.
It is a play about a play about a small theater company putting on a play ("The Three Sisters"), and thus consciously an example of the problem it addresses, often with aching hilarity -- that the world of the theater is growing ever more estranged from the straightforward business of telling stories.
As sketched in this paper, a first lesson from philosophy of science is not to lose sight of external, environmental, higher-level causes of disease and be aware of the possibility of people getting more estranged from their health and their bodies (the disease is in the molecules), which may also affect feelings of responsibility in relation to own health.
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The more estranged we become from our fellow humans, the closer we get to our pets — we may not know the names of our neighbors, but we do know that Brownie Mama is "mommy's little baby!" This closeness makes their eventual loss that much harder to bear, and explains why modern pet graves are far more sentimental than their vintage counterparts.
He says we're "more estranged, physically and metaphorically, from one another than ever before" – this after repeatedly mocking our newfound desire to discuss the way we "feel".
To a degree hard to grasp by anyone under 50 today, New York in 1970 was a city more poignantly estranged from its past than at any other time in its history, before or since.
Run a few years ahead and more people were estranged from normalcy––and normalcy was looking crazier because of the Vietnam War.
More or less estranged from his children — he had no real gift for intimacy, just a near-obsessive drive to be close to women he'd rejected or who'd rejected him — O'Neill was also beginning to show signs of the brain disorder that led to his death, in 1953, at sixty-five.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com